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Lab: AP Review Sheet

AP Physics

Chapter 23: Electric Fields

Erynn Kim

Background: The electromagnetic force between charged particles is one of the fundamental forces
of nature. One manifestation of the electromagnetic force is the electric force. Coulombs law is the
fundamental law governing the electric force between any two charged particles. This chapter
describes how an electric field associated with a charge distribution can affect other charged particles.
Vocabulary:
electrical conductor: a material in which some of the
electrons are free electrons that are not bound to atoms and
can move relatively freely through the material
electrical insulator: material in which all electrons are bound
to atoms and cannot move freely through the material
semiconductor: material whose electrical properties are
between those of insulators and those of conductors
induction: charged object causes electrons in the neutral
conductor to migrate away from the charged object, leaving an
effective positive charge in the side of the conductor near the
charged object
ground: reservoir that can accept or provide electrons freely
with negligible effect on its electrical characteristics
point charge: charged particle of zero size
electric field: field existing in region of space around a
charged object, called the source charge. When another
charged object, the test charge, enters this electric field, and
electric force acts on it.

Major Topics:
Properties of Electric Charges
Charging Objects by Induction
Coulombs Law
Electric Fields
Formulae:
q q
Fe = ke 1 2 2
r

q1q2
Fe = ke 2 r12
r

F
E e
q0

Fe = qE

q
E = ke 2i ri
ri
i

dq
E = ke 2 r
r

Charge
Density
Formulae:
Q

V
Q

A
Q

dq = dV

dq = dA
dq = d

Diagrams:

Electric field, test charge, and


point charge (directly left)
Coulombs law (down and left)
Electric field lines (below)

Problems
1. [Easy]
A 7.50-nC point charge is located 1.80 m from a 4.20-nC point charge. (a) Find the magnitude of the
electric force that one particle exerts on the other. (b) Is the force attractive or repulsive?

SOLUTION:
(a)
F = ke

q1q2
r2

(7.50 10 9 C)(4.20 10 9 C)
F = (8.99 10 9 N m 2 /C 2 )

(1.80m) 2

F = 8.74 10 8 N

(b)
The force is repulsive because the point charges are both positively charged. Opposite charges
attract each other, while charges of the same sign repulse one another.

Problems (contd)
2. [Medium]
A charged cork ball of mass 1.00 g is suspended on a light string in the

presence of a uniform electric field. When E = 3.00i + 5.00 j 10 5 N /C ,


the ball is in equilibrium at = 37.0. Find (a) the charge on the ball and
(b) the tension in the string.

SOLUTION:

qE

Fg

Begin with force analysis.




F = T + qE + Fg = 0

We are given: E x = 3.00 10 5 N /C and E y = 5.00 10 5 N /C

Applying Newtons second law:

F
F

= qE x T sin 37.0 = 0

= qEy T cos 37.0 mg = 0

Eq. 1
Eq. 2

(a) Substitute T from Eq. 1 into Eq. 2


mg
(1.00 10 3 kg)(9.80m /s2 )
q=
=
Ex
3.00 10 5 N /C
Ey +
5.00 10 5 N /C +
tan 37.0
tan 37.0
8
q = 1.09 10 C
(b) Using solved q, substitute into Eq. 1 to find tension:
qE x
T=
= 5.44
10 3 N

sin 37.0

Problems (contd)
3. [Hard]
(a) A ring of radius a carries a uniformly distributed positive total charge Q. Calculate the electric
field due to the ring at a point P lying a distance x from its center along the central axis
perpendicular to the plane of the ring.
(b) Use answer from part (a) to calculate the electric field at a point P that lies along the central
perpendicular axis of a disk and a distance x from the center of the disk. The disk is a uniformly
charged disk of radius R that has a uniform surface charge density .
(a)
(b)

SOLUTION:
(a) Evaluate parallel component of an electric field contribution from a segment of charge dq on ring
(Note: all dEys cancel each other out.):
dq
dq
dE x = ke 2 cos = k e 2
cos
Eq. 1
r
a + x2
From the geometry in the figure above, evaluate cos :
x
x
cos = =
Eq. 2
r ( a 2 + x 2 )1/ 2
Substitute Eq. 2 into Eq. 1.
ke x
ke x
Ex =
dq =
3/2
2
2 3/2
2
(a + x )
(a + x 2 )
E =

ke x

(a

+ x2)

3/2

(b) Find the amount of charge dq on a ring of radius r and width dr :


dq = dA = (2rdr) = 2rdr
Use the above result combined with answer (a) to find field due to the ring:
ke x
dE x =
3 / 2 (2rdr )
(r 2 + x 2 )
To obtain total field at P, integrate this expression over the limits r = 0 to r = R (x is constant):
r 2 + x 2 1/ 2 R
R
R
3
/
2
(
)
2rdr
E x = ke x 0
=k e x 0 ( r 2 + x 2 ) d ( r 2 ) =ke x
3
/
2
1/2

(r 2 + x 2 )

E = 2ke 1
( R 2 + x 2 )1/ 2

dq

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